Add-on repositories

Beginning with Dharma, XBMC includes an interface to browse remote repositories where add-ons can be retrieved. The model is similar to the way many current Linux distributions work, whereby there is a "main" repository that is the default, and additional ones may be added by the user. The Official Add-on Repository is included with XBMC by default and is maintained by the XBMC team.

2 Directory Structure

addon.id should be the same as the addon's id, which is expected to be unique.

x.y.z is the addon's version, the same should be listed in its version attribute.

3 Addons.xml

XBMC expects to fetch a master xml file that contains the information for each add-on inside the repo. This file is named addons.xml - it can be placed external to the main repository of add-on files if you wish. This file merely encapsulates the other addon.xml files in an <addons> tag. See below for the basic structure:

4 Repository Add-on

Repositories are distributed just like any other add-on. In order for you to browse one in XBMC, you'll need to create an add-on and install it. The repository addon extends the xbmc.addon.repository extension point, so in addition to the general XML structure and icons required for an icon, you'll need an 'extension' block as follows:

4.1 info

URL to the main xml file, compressed="true" parameter specifies whether or not the xml should be fetched with compression (gzip) enabled.

4.2 checksum

An MD5 checksum file of the main xml file. If present, XBMC verifies the addons.xml file against this MD5. This is the mechanism that XBMC uses to decide whether we need to fetch the full XML file to verify whether updates are required. If the MD5 file has changed we fetch the full info file. If not, we don't. Thus, in order for automatic updates to work, you must ensure that you have the checksum file in place.

4.3 datadir

URL to the root directory that contains the addons (i.e. the directory holding the addon.id subdirectories). If the zip attribute is set to true, then XBMC downloads addons via /datadir/addon.id/addon.id-x.y.z.zip. If zip is set to false, then XBMC assumes that each addon.id directory simply contains the addon itself, i.e. /datadir/addon.id/files for addon. Online repositories should always have zip set to true, both for efficiency of download and for the protection that .zip offers by way of verifying the download (i.e. can we unzip it).